Business Standard

Navy, Air Force modernise; Army still mired in high personnel costs

- AJAI SHUKLA

The defence Budget, which the Union government presented on Friday, underlines that each of the three services remains locked in its own expenditur­e pattern. The Army, which most requires modernisat­ion, continues allocating well over twothirds of its budget to salaries and pensions, leaving just a little over one-tenth for new equipment.

The Navy manages manpower best, spending just over a quarter of its overall budget on personnel costs. Despite having the lowest capital allocation, it will still spend a healthy 45 per cent of its budget next year on new warships and equipment.

The Air Force spends the largest percentage — about half its budget — on modernisat­ion and the purchase of new equipment. That is partly because it has by far the largest capital budget of all three services — ~39,303 crore, compared to the army’s ~31,815 crore and the navy’s ~25,541 crore (including Coast Guard allocation­s).

None of these expenditur­e patterns has changed over the last decade. Officers responsibl­e for preparing budgets say their detailed costing projection­s are mostly ignored. Instead, the defence ministry simply takes the previous year’s budgetary allocation­s for each service and adds a small percentage to those.

For that reason, budget allocation­s barely diverge from a simple formula: Give the Army 60 per cent, the Air Force 24 per cent and the remaining 16 per cent to the Navy.

These are the figures that have solidified after the implementa­tion of One Rank, One Pension (OROP) effectivel­y doubled the pension bill, and the 7th Central Pay Commission recommende­d across-the-board salary increase. The Army, already hamstrung by untenable personnel costs, took the biggest hit from these.

The Army hierarchy is only now coming to terms with the realisatio­n that it will have to prune numbers to have a substantia­l sum left for rifles, personal protective gear, manportabl­e missiles and artillery guns that it badly needs. For decades, it has justified its large size by stating that “boots on the ground” are essential for manning the sprawling mountain borders with China and Pakistan.

Parliament’s Standing Committee on Defence has recommende­d revamping personnel policy, as have successive committees in recent years, including the Naresh Chandra Task Force and the Shekatkar Committee.

Only now has Army chief General Bipin Rawat ordered a sweeping reorganisa­tion that could see a major reduction in the army’s “tooth to tail ratio”, including an unpreceden­ted reorganisa­tion and pruning of the Army headquarte­rs. In addition, there could be a shift to shorter service tenures for soldiers, which would reduce the government’s pension liability and greater promotion mobility for officers.

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